Gulf News

Armed men raid money exchange

FIVE SUSPECTS, ALL WEARING MASKS, FLED WITH AROUND DH1M

- By Faisal Masudi Staff Reporter — With inputs from Suchitra Bajpai Chaudhary, Senior Reporter

Masked gunmen flee with an estimated Dh1 million in cash after spraying gas at customers and staff

In a daylight robbery, masked gunmen raided a money exchange in Karama before fleeing with a huge amount of cash yesterday, an exchange official and an eyewitness told Gulf News.

A senior official of Al Razouki Exchange, who spoke on condition of anonymity, told Gulf News: “The robbers entered the exchange’s Karama branch at about 4.30pm and within a minute decamped with all the day’s cash, which could be around Dh1 million. A CCTV camera showed that the suspects were inside for approximat­ely a minute. Following the incident, the general manager of the branch called the police and they are still assessing the situation.”

A police comment was not immediatel­y available.

Meanwhile, a 50-year-old Pakistani restaurant worker, who was in the exchange when the robbery happened, said five men armed with pistols rushed in.

“It was all over in around five minutes. They sprayed the counter staff and customers with a gas that got us teary-eyed and made us start coughing. One of the gunmen was shouting ‘hurry, hurry’ to his partners in English. I couldn’t make out his accent,” he told Gulf News.

“One of them pointed a black pistol at me and told me to stop,” he said, adding that another customer walked out as the gunmen entered.

“One of them took cash from the counter and put it into a black bag and they all fled together, disappeari­ng into an alley between the exchange and the building beside it,” the eyewitness said.

Cordoned off

“I walked out immediatel­y after them and sat coughing on the pavement. The alarm was sounding and police arrived within minutes,” he added.

Hours later, at around 8pm, police and plaincloth­es investigat­ors were still at the scene. The exchange entrance was cordoned off and officials were talking to employees.

“There was at least one Filipina and two Indian women employees and a cashier inside when I was there, besides two other customers. I wasn’t scared, everything was happening too fast,” the customer said. An employee of another branch of the exchange said the Karama branch “is closed today because of a security problem”.

Al Razouki Exchange was founded in 1981 by a group of Indian businessme­n, according to the company website. The company has over a dozen branches in the UAE.

Armed robberies are uncommon, but not unheard of in the UAE. Police have responded to criminal incidents involving weapons in the past, mostly involving banks, money exchanges or places of business.

In March this year, a Filipina wearing a niqab was arrested after a botched armed robbery at an Abu Dhabi money exchange using a fake gun and a knife.

In September 2014, a gang of five suspects conducted an armed robbery using a fake gun at Al Mustaqbal Money Exchange on Shaikh Rashid Bin Humaid Road in Ajman. The gang of Nigerians allegedly stole Dh275,000 in foreign currencies. The five suspects were later arrested.

In October 2013, three suspects conducted a daring daylight robbery of millions of dirhams from security guards, who were restocking automatic teller machines (ATMs) at Lulu Village in the Muhaisnah area and made off with two cash boxes containing Dh2 million.

They sprayed the counter staff and customers with a gas that made us teary and start coughing. One of the gunmen was shouting ‘hurry, hurry’ to his partners.”

A Pakistani restaurant worker

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